Lemma 10.138.7. Let $R \to S$ be a ring map. Let $P \to S$ be a surjective $R$-algebra map from a polynomial ring $P$ onto $S$. Denote $J \subset P$ the kernel. Then $R \to S$ is formally smooth if and only if the sequence
\[ 0 \to J/J^2 \to \Omega _{P/R} \otimes _ P S \to \Omega _{S/R} \to 0 \]
of Lemma 10.131.9 is a split exact sequence.
Proof.
Assume $S$ is formally smooth over $R$. By Lemma 10.138.5 this means there exists an $R$-algebra map $S \to P/J^2$ which is a right inverse to the canonical map $P/J^2 \to S$. By Lemma 10.131.11 we have $\Omega _{P/R} \otimes _ P S = \Omega _{(P/J^2)/R} \otimes _{P/J^2} S$. By Lemma 10.131.10 the sequence is split.
Assume the exact sequence of the lemma is split exact. Choose a splitting $\sigma : \Omega _{S/R} \to \Omega _{P/R} \otimes _ P S$. For each $\lambda \in S$ choose $x_\lambda \in P$ which maps to $\lambda $. Next, for each $\lambda \in S$ choose $f_\lambda \in J$ such that
\[ \text{d}f_\lambda = \text{d}x_\lambda - \sigma (\text{d}\lambda ) \]
in the middle term of the exact sequence. We claim that $s : \lambda \mapsto x_\lambda - f_\lambda \mod J^2$ is an $R$-algebra homomorphism $s : S \to P/J^2$. To prove this we will repeatedly use that if $h \in J$ and $\text{d}h = 0$ in $\Omega _{P/R} \otimes _ R S$, then $h \in J^2$. Let $\lambda , \mu \in S$. Then $\sigma (\text{d}\lambda + \text{d}\mu - \text{d}(\lambda + \mu )) = 0$. This implies
\[ \text{d}(x_\lambda + x_\mu - x_{\lambda + \mu } - f_\lambda - f_\mu + f_{\lambda + \mu }) = 0 \]
which means that $x_\lambda + x_\mu - x_{\lambda + \mu } - f_\lambda - f_\mu + f_{\lambda + \mu } \in J^2$, which in turn means that $s(\lambda ) + s(\mu ) = s(\lambda + \mu )$. Similarly, we have $\sigma (\lambda \text{d}\mu + \mu \text{d}\lambda - \text{d}\lambda \mu ) = 0$ which implies that
\[ \mu (\text{d}x_\lambda - \text{d}f_\lambda ) + \lambda (\text{d}x_\mu - \text{d}f_\mu ) - \text{d}x_{\lambda \mu } + \text{d}f_{\lambda \mu } = 0 \]
in the middle term of the exact sequence. Moreover we have
\[ \text{d}(x_\lambda x_\mu ) = x_\lambda \text{d}x_\mu + x_\mu \text{d}x_\lambda = \lambda \text{d}x_\mu + \mu \text{d} x_\lambda \]
in the middle term again. Combined these equations mean that $x_\lambda x_\mu - x_{\lambda \mu } - \mu f_\lambda - \lambda f_\mu + f_{\lambda \mu } \in J^2$, hence $(x_\lambda - f_\lambda )(x_\mu - f_\mu ) - (x_{\lambda \mu } - f_{\lambda \mu }) \in J^2$ as $f_\lambda f_\mu \in J^2$, which means that $s(\lambda )s(\mu ) = s(\lambda \mu )$. If $\lambda \in R$, then $\text{d}\lambda = 0$ and we see that $\text{d}f_\lambda = \text{d}x_\lambda $, hence $\lambda - x_\lambda + f_\lambda \in J^2$ and hence $s(\lambda ) = \lambda $ as desired. At this point we can apply Lemma 10.138.5 to conclude that $S/R$ is formally smooth.
$\square$
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